


Drop it low, Duchess.
Meghan Markle’s former “Suits” co-star Patrick J. Adams has shared a throwback video of the royal dancing up a storm during a cast party back in 2012.
Adams shared the clip to his Instagram Stories highlights reel on Thursday which shows the free-spirited royal raving to the track “Heads High” by Mr. Vegas at an undisclosed bar.
Adams’ wife and “Pretty Little Liars” star Troian Bellisario and actor Rick Hoffman can also be seen grooving and shaking alongside Markle in the video.
Just before posting the clip, Adams hilariously changed his Instagram bio to read: “The guy from that show you’re watching on that app because that girl married that prince” — referencing how Markle married Prince Harry in 2018.
“Suits” aired on the USA network from 2011 until 2019 over the course of nine seasons.
Adams portrayed Markle’s husband, Mike Ross, on the show while the California native played paralegal Rachel Zane.
The series has found a new life on Netflix since its conclusion four years prior, and has seen an increase in viewership on the streaming platform.
The show was added to the steamer on June 23 and clocked up a whopping 3.14 billion minutes of watch time during its first week.
“Suits” has also been making headlines recently, with creator Aaron Korsh claiming last month that the royal family blocked Markle’s character from saying certain phrases.
“I will say, and I think Harry put this in [his book ‘Spare’], because I heard people talking about it — [the royal family] weighed in on some stuff,” he explained in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter.
“Not many things, by the way, but a few things that we wanted to do and couldn’t do, and it was a little irritating,” he went on.
Korsh noted that Markle was supposed to say the line, “My family would say poppycock,” however, the Firm had it canned.
“The royal family did not want her saying the word,” he alleged about Buckingham Palace. “They didn’t want to put the word ‘poppycock’ in her mouth. I presume because they didn’t want people cutting things together of her saying ‘c—k.’”
But alas, the term was changed to the much-better word: “bulls—t.”